Stable oxygen isotope variability in two contrasting glacier river catchments in Greenland

Analysis of stable oxygen isotope (delta O-18) characteristics is a useful tool to investigate water provenance in glacier river systems. In order to attain knowledge on the diversity of delta O-18 variations in Greenlandic rivers, we examined two contrasting glacierised catchments disconnected from...

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Main Authors: Yde JC, Knudsen NT, Steffensen JP, Carrivick JL, Hasholt B, Ingeman-Nielsen T, Kronborg C, Larsen NK, Mernild SH, Oerter H, Roberts DH, Russell AJ
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Copernicus GmbH
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprint.ncl.ac.uk/fulltext.aspx?url=226606/7E61568F-67E5-4776-9AED-61DD57B655E6.pdf&pub_id=226606
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spelling ftunivnewcastle:oai:eprint.ncl.ac.uk:226606 2023-05-15T16:20:54+02:00 Stable oxygen isotope variability in two contrasting glacier river catchments in Greenland Yde JC Knudsen NT Steffensen JP Carrivick JL Hasholt B Ingeman-Nielsen T Kronborg C Larsen NK Mernild SH Oerter H Roberts DH Russell AJ application/pdf https://eprint.ncl.ac.uk/fulltext.aspx?url=226606/7E61568F-67E5-4776-9AED-61DD57B655E6.pdf&pub_id=226606 unknown Copernicus GmbH Hydrology and Earth System Sciences Article ftunivnewcastle 2020-06-11T23:32:18Z Analysis of stable oxygen isotope (delta O-18) characteristics is a useful tool to investigate water provenance in glacier river systems. In order to attain knowledge on the diversity of delta O-18 variations in Greenlandic rivers, we examined two contrasting glacierised catchments disconnected from the Greenland Ice Sheet (GrIS). At the Mittivakkat Gletscher river, a small river draining a local temperate glacier in southeast Greenland, diurnal oscillations in delta O-18 occurred with a 3h time lag to the diurnal oscillations in run-off. The mean annual delta O-18 was -14.68 +/- 0.18 parts per thousand during the peak flow period. A hydrograph separation analysis revealed that the ice melt component constituted 82 +/- 5% of the total run-off and dominated the observed variations during peak flow in August 2004. The snowmelt component peaked between 10:00 and 13:00 local time, reflecting the long travel time and an inefficient distributed subglacial drainage network in the upper part of the glacier. At the Kuannersuit Glacier river on the island Qeqertarsuaq in west Greenland, the delta O-18 characteristics were examined after the major 1995-1998 glacier surge event. The mean annual delta O-18 was -19.47 +/- 0.55 parts per thousand. Despite large spatial variations in the delta O-18 values of glacier ice on the newly formed glacier tongue, there were no diurnal os-cillations in the bulk meltwater emanating from the glacier in the post-surge years. This is likely a consequence of a tortuous subglacial drainage system consisting of linked cavities, which formed during the surge event. Overall, a comparison of the delta O-18 compositions from glacial river water in Greenland shows distinct differences between water draining local glaciers and ice caps (between -23.0 and -13.7 parts per thousand) and the GrIS (between -29.9 and -23.2 parts per thousand). This study demonstrates that water isotope analyses can be used to obtain important information on water sources and the subglacial drainage system structure that is highly desired for understanding glacier hydrology. Article in Journal/Newspaper glacier Greenland greenlandic Ice Sheet Qeqertarsuaq Newcastle University Library ePrints Service Greenland Qeqertarsuaq ENVELOPE(-56.867,-56.867,74.400,74.400)
institution Open Polar
collection Newcastle University Library ePrints Service
op_collection_id ftunivnewcastle
language unknown
description Analysis of stable oxygen isotope (delta O-18) characteristics is a useful tool to investigate water provenance in glacier river systems. In order to attain knowledge on the diversity of delta O-18 variations in Greenlandic rivers, we examined two contrasting glacierised catchments disconnected from the Greenland Ice Sheet (GrIS). At the Mittivakkat Gletscher river, a small river draining a local temperate glacier in southeast Greenland, diurnal oscillations in delta O-18 occurred with a 3h time lag to the diurnal oscillations in run-off. The mean annual delta O-18 was -14.68 +/- 0.18 parts per thousand during the peak flow period. A hydrograph separation analysis revealed that the ice melt component constituted 82 +/- 5% of the total run-off and dominated the observed variations during peak flow in August 2004. The snowmelt component peaked between 10:00 and 13:00 local time, reflecting the long travel time and an inefficient distributed subglacial drainage network in the upper part of the glacier. At the Kuannersuit Glacier river on the island Qeqertarsuaq in west Greenland, the delta O-18 characteristics were examined after the major 1995-1998 glacier surge event. The mean annual delta O-18 was -19.47 +/- 0.55 parts per thousand. Despite large spatial variations in the delta O-18 values of glacier ice on the newly formed glacier tongue, there were no diurnal os-cillations in the bulk meltwater emanating from the glacier in the post-surge years. This is likely a consequence of a tortuous subglacial drainage system consisting of linked cavities, which formed during the surge event. Overall, a comparison of the delta O-18 compositions from glacial river water in Greenland shows distinct differences between water draining local glaciers and ice caps (between -23.0 and -13.7 parts per thousand) and the GrIS (between -29.9 and -23.2 parts per thousand). This study demonstrates that water isotope analyses can be used to obtain important information on water sources and the subglacial drainage system structure that is highly desired for understanding glacier hydrology.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Yde JC
Knudsen NT
Steffensen JP
Carrivick JL
Hasholt B
Ingeman-Nielsen T
Kronborg C
Larsen NK
Mernild SH
Oerter H
Roberts DH
Russell AJ
spellingShingle Yde JC
Knudsen NT
Steffensen JP
Carrivick JL
Hasholt B
Ingeman-Nielsen T
Kronborg C
Larsen NK
Mernild SH
Oerter H
Roberts DH
Russell AJ
Stable oxygen isotope variability in two contrasting glacier river catchments in Greenland
author_facet Yde JC
Knudsen NT
Steffensen JP
Carrivick JL
Hasholt B
Ingeman-Nielsen T
Kronborg C
Larsen NK
Mernild SH
Oerter H
Roberts DH
Russell AJ
author_sort Yde JC
title Stable oxygen isotope variability in two contrasting glacier river catchments in Greenland
title_short Stable oxygen isotope variability in two contrasting glacier river catchments in Greenland
title_full Stable oxygen isotope variability in two contrasting glacier river catchments in Greenland
title_fullStr Stable oxygen isotope variability in two contrasting glacier river catchments in Greenland
title_full_unstemmed Stable oxygen isotope variability in two contrasting glacier river catchments in Greenland
title_sort stable oxygen isotope variability in two contrasting glacier river catchments in greenland
publisher Copernicus GmbH
url https://eprint.ncl.ac.uk/fulltext.aspx?url=226606/7E61568F-67E5-4776-9AED-61DD57B655E6.pdf&pub_id=226606
long_lat ENVELOPE(-56.867,-56.867,74.400,74.400)
geographic Greenland
Qeqertarsuaq
geographic_facet Greenland
Qeqertarsuaq
genre glacier
Greenland
greenlandic
Ice Sheet
Qeqertarsuaq
genre_facet glacier
Greenland
greenlandic
Ice Sheet
Qeqertarsuaq
op_source Hydrology and Earth System Sciences
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